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Toronto’s Santa Claus parade to be staged in closed parade route, broadcast in a TV special

Santa Claus has arrived in Toronto by plane, pulled by horses and at least once pulled by reindeer, but in 2020, in an effort to slow the spread of COVID-19, he’ll be arriving remotely by television.

In a major departure from a tradition that has entertained families for generations, the parade will not wind through Toronto streets cheered on by thousands of children and their parents struggling to keep warm — a quintessentially Canadian experience that kicks off the holiday season in the city.

Instead the event will be staged in a new, closed parade route and broadcast later in a two-hour national television special, organizers officially announced early Friday morning.

“It’s been a tradition for so long, and making it move away from what many Torontonians and Canadians have come to expect of the parade is difficult,” said Clay Charters, president and CEO of the parade.

“On the other side, it was a decision that was certainly made with the interest of public health in mind.”

Charters would not disclose the new location, but said it will provide a safe environment for everyone working on the parade and will preclude the general public from wandering across it.

The parade has not been cancelled since it launched in Toronto in 1905, Charters said.

It was held in 1918 and 1919, as the world fought a flu pandemic that would claim an estimated 20 million to 50 million lives. COVID-19 has killed more than one million people worldwide since it was first detected at the end of 2019.

Toronto announced on Sept. 23 that it , part of its effort to stem the spread of COVID-19.

Santa Claus parade organizers have been saying since early September , but this this is the first time details of those changes have been shared.

The televised parade will include 20 floats, which viewers will be able to see close-up for the first time. Organizers are promising special musical guests, celebrity appearances, bands playing traditional Christmas songs, and the parade’s iconic celebrity clowns. The show is scheduled to air Saturday, Dec. 5th at 7 p.m. ET on CTV and CTV2.

The parade typically takes place in November.

“Holiday celebrations will look much different this year, but we are committed to delivering a very special edition of the parade to viewers in prime time,” said Mike Cosentino, president, content and programming.

Correction – Oct. 2, 2020: This article was edited from a previous version that mistakenly said the parade would be broadcast live.

is a Toronto-based reporter covering city hall and municipal politics for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Shawn Micallef: Closing Lake Shore to cars on weekends clearly worked. Here’s how to make ActiveTO even better as COVID-19 cases rise

Over the last four months, kids in Toronto got on bikes and followed their parents around like goslings behind a mother goose each weekend. It’s a sight not as common as it should be in Toronto, where the speed and erratic skills of drivers, along with roads designed for cars first, can make such an outing fraught.

The “ActiveTO” major road closures on Lake Shore Boulevard, Bayview Avenue and River Street changed that. After a bad spring where people in public space were suspect and shamed, when all of High Park was closed because of the spectre of a cherry blossom blowout, the city of Toronto did something great: it gave the people space to spread out so they could walk, run and cycle.

The move acknowledged that this is a city of many apartments with inhabitants who have no or little outdoor space of their own. It was also a strong signal that being outside was good, safe and where we should go to exercise, improve our mental health and even socialize during this long pandemic. I don’t think I’ve seen a city program embraced so quickly and enthusiastically. It’s a major success.

Last week, the city . On days without significant rainfall from June to August, an average of 18,000 cyclists and 4,000 pedestrians were on Lake Shore West. On Lake Shore East, 6,300 cyclists and 5,700 pedestrians were present, while 2,000 cyclists and 300 pedestrians used Bayview.

All this happened and the sky did not fall. The sky being traffic, that is. Parts of major arteries can be shut down an entire weekend and the city can carry on just fine, without major disruptions. That’s a lesson to remember.

On weekends when there was construction on the Gardiner, the Lake Shore closures were skipped. It all worked out.

The street closures were set to come to an end last weekend, something that took me by surprise considering both their success and the dramatic rise in COVID-19 cases of late, largely due to indoor transmission. The need to keep encouraging outdoor activity is still there.

Enlightened heads prevailed and Mayor John Tory announced the closures will be extended into October. As the temperature gets cooler and the annual urge to hibernate rises, it’s an important message to send: we’ve got to do winter differently this year, like it or not.

Another ActiveTO message ,” those routes with the “Share Space” signs and barriers that, in theory, forced drivers to slow down, but their success is harder to gauge.

Roads in North America are generally designed to move cars fast and minimize driver thinking, but the opposite of both is needed in cities. As the well-marked photo radar cameras proved over the summer, speeders in their first month of operation, physical redesign of streets is also needed to slow drivers down to safer speeds. Those barriers did that for some, getting drivers to think and negotiate with oncoming traffic. Eye contact, necessary communication and some coerced courtesy: all things that make drivers better use the skills they should have.

Unfortunately, some drivers decided they would treat the Quiet Streets as if they were on a giant slalom alpine ski course. On streets that didn’t have concrete barriers installed, the orange and black rubber barrels were routinely moved to the side or simply run over. Beginning Thanksgiving, the Quiet Street signs and barricades are scheduled to be removed.

This is a great shame as this initiative needed time and tweaks to become a success. Time for both drivers and other users to understand and learn how to use this new kind of shared street, something largely alien to North America but common in other regions, and for design tweaks to be made and other elements introduced that would slow drivers down, like speed humps and narrower street widths. The city conducted a survey on Quiet Streets and worthy resident suggestions could also be incorporated.

I know I’m not alone in finding I gravitated to these streets when walking and I often followed one to another when out cycling. In some places there was a logic to how they were laid out and they became welcome corridors in a city that can be hostile to non-automobile forms of transportation. When driving I avoided these streets.

Imagine if these routes were permanent: they would change the way we navigate the city. Imperfect as they are, the sign on each block proclaiming all forms of transportation are welcome and must be respected is a big deal, a philosophical shift.

Over the summer, . Fall and winter are not the time to slow that momentum, but rather find even more ways like these to make the outdoor city welcoming to residents.

Shawn Micallef is a Toronto-based writer and a freelance contributing columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

‘A time when physical distancing is essential’: Barrie hoping to drum up support for Business in the Parks program

Got a dance class or music lessons to give, but lack the space due to COVID-19 restrictions?

Barrie’s Business in the Parks pilot program runs until the end of October and it may be the perfect opportunity for entrepreneurs and instructors to give clients a little breathing space amid the pandemic, the city’s economic and creative development director, Stephannie Schlichter, said.

“The program provided the city with the opportunity to offer a service to local businesses during a time when physical distancing is essential, while still allowing them to operate safely,” she said, noting two bookings have been made through the program so far. “We hope to grow this program in the future and offer more opportunities for local companies and organizations to benefit from reserving designated city spaces.”

Council authorized the program in August. It allocates space at Meridian Square and the Kiwanis Pavilion, near the Southshore Community Centre, to commercial and event-based businesses for half- and full-day blocks.

Those businesses can offer private dance, fitness and music classes, art workshops and similar activities. Customers pay a fee and members of the public are barred from the area during the booking.

For more information, visit .

‘You do get worried about a shutdown’: Barrie fitness club fights on as COVID-19 restrictions continue

Is Barrie fitness club owner Christy Toms worried Simcoe County may follow York Region and shutdown gyms as the second wave of COVID-19 takes hold?

The owner of in the city’s south end says she doesn’t dwell on the thought, but it does cross her mind.

“I’m thinking it won’t happen, but you don’t know,” Toms told Simcoe.com. “Last time, I never thought that would happen in my entire life. So, when it went from two weeks to four months, that was a long time. You do get worried about a shutdown.”

Toms, who opened HotBod more than six years ago, offered online classes during the shutdown and is taking advantage of Stage 3 openings announced in July. 

But there’s no guarantee her business would survive a second shutdown.

“I’ve planned ahead in case,” she said. “But would we survive it? I don’t know, but I’m hoping we would.”

HotBod was on a roll before provincewide COVID-19 restrictions closed gyms in the spring.

“Last year was the best year we ever had. We’re probably down about 50 per cent revenue from what I was pre-COVID-19, which is frustrating to say the least, but you just kind of keep moving forward.”

HotBod has gone from “cramming” 30 participants in a fitness class to limits of 15, and has put several COVID-19 safety measures in place.

Face masks are essential at all times, except when a member is working out in their own space and is two metres away from others. 

Toms said she decided to go even further by checking temperatures and asking symptom-screening questions before members enter.

“People want to be safe for the most part,” she said. “I think people are just happy to work out and be safe at the same time.”

Toms said she could take advantage of a new rent subsidy announced by the federal government and has accepted a $40,000 government loan.

But she is hoping she won’t have to dip into that safety net.

“At least that’s there if I have to use it. No one likes to use a loan when they’ve been in business for a while.”

New developments in the works for downtown Orillia

Four projects in the city’s core collectively benefitted from more than $81,000 in grants through a program aimed at driving downtown development.

Among the latest beneficiaries of Orillia’s Downtown Tomorrow Community Improvement Plan grant program was Henneveld Holdings Inc., owner of 17-19 Mississaga St. W.

The company scored $52,500 toward a project involving the updating of two commercial units on the main floor to accommodate a refreshed salon and retail store.

In addition, the building’s second storey will be converted from office space into two residential units.

“My partner grew up in this town and loves the history and potential of Orillia,” said Jesse Henneveld. “I’ve lived here for a little over three years and have grown to love this small city as well.”

Henneveld said they purchased the property both as an investment opportunity and in the hope of building their small businesses.

“We were so excited about the announcement of the grant, as we knew it would help us improve our project that much more,” Henneveld added.

The grant program includes financial incentives designed to stimulate development in the city’s core, with funds awarded through the latest intake going to support façade improvements, building improvements for new commercial spaces, and grants to create two new residential units in downtown Orillia.

“Despite the impacts that COVID-19 has had on our economy, we’ve held a record number of pre-consultations for development in the downtown,” said Laura Thompson, Orillia’s senior manager of business development.

Under the latest round of grants, My Moon Collective received approximately $7,330 for new signage, doors and windows to improve visibility for the store, accessibility for customers and overall visitor experience.

Jeff Pitcher benefitted from two grants – roughly $14,400 toward development of two new office spaces at 73 Mississaga St. E., and $7,225 for façade improvements at 75 Mississaga St. E. 

“These four projects are a great representation of the development that this program can incentivize, featuring everything from renovations to accommodate a new entrepreneur to the complete restoration of an existing building to house new apartments and commercial units,” Thompson added.

The grant program’s third and final intake for 2020 closed Oct. 30.

Masks, Plexiglas create barriers for Ontario’s hearing loss community

Toronto resident Laura Mather recalls the first time her privacy and security was compromised, as a person with hearing loss living amid COVID-19.

After masks became mandatory indoors throughout the city, she was at a pharmacy, picking up a prescription for a loved one.

Normally during these types of interactions, Mather relies heavily on being able to speech read, but because the pharmacist was wearing a medical mask, she was unable to do so. 

“She needed me to confirm some information and she’s repeating herself — same words, same tone, same volume  about three times,” Mather said. “The pharmacist’s conversation with me was so not private that the person six feet behind me standing in line was able to tell me what they said.”

lauramatherToronto resident and business owner Laura Mather has been speaking out about barriers faced by the hearing loss community, due to COVID-19. – Laura Mather photo

Mather’s experiences are not unique.

Keegan Noxell, treasurer of the Young Adults Network at the Canadian Hard of Hearing Association, said a simple task such as ordering food has left him guessing and hoping that he understood the information correctly.

“When everyone is wearing masks, it is crucial that your voice is clear and projected. If you are having difficulty hearing, ask the person to rephrase what was said to add further context to the conversation,” he said, adding that having a pen and paper handy can also be helpful. 

Noxell said from a business perspective, he would like to see more awareness training on the varied communication needs of customers, so that staff can better assist those who are deaf or hard of hearing.

Mather said solutions can be as easy as having a communication card with commonly asked questions taped to the Plexiglas at a checkout line or a reception desk, or having a whiteboard with a dry erase marker that can be sanitized after each use.

Mather is an entrepreneur and one of a number of individuals who have been creating and selling masks with a clear window that aids in speech reading. She said she’s also prototyping a system that would allow for tablets to be attached to Plexiglas and loaded with a transcription application.

Rex Banks, a doctor of audiology and director of hearing health at Canadian Hearing Services, said there are numerous transcription apps out there that individuals can download to their mobile devices, but there are other ways to transcribe as well.

rexbanksRex Banks is an audiologist and director of hearing health at Canadian Hearing Services. – CHS photo

One simple solution can be increasing the font size on their mobile device and then turning the microphone on in the “notes” application — which will transcribe their speech — and holding it out to the second party in the conversation.

Aside from this, Banks said people who have hearing aids should make an effort to wear them and if they don’t have them, they may want to consider taking that step.

Through virtual care, Banks said he is able to remotely adjust people’s hearing aids as they need it.

As well, he said there is recent technology that can be utilized such as a “face mask mode” on new hearing devices, which enhances frequencies that are most important for speech.

“Masks are causing communication issues because instantly everything is very muffled, making it more difficult to understand speech, particularly in the high frequencies,” he said. “The masks also take away our ability to read and see facial expressions and to speech read … which gives us lot of vital information in terms of understanding some words and intent and tone during communication.”

Marilyn Kingdon, president of the Canadian Hard of Hearing Association (CHHA), agrees.

“The full face mask, for every person with hearing loss, that’s kind of their worst nightmare,” she said, adding that CHHA has partnered with another local organization on a clear mask campaign. 

marilynkingdonMarilyn Kingdon is the president of the Canadian Hard of Hearing Association. -CHHA photo

Kingdon said CHHA has been working with the federal and provincial government to promote communication access and discuss how that works.

“Whether it’s with respect to wearing a clear mask which works really well, or providing captioning, or just providing that accessible type of communication across the board — without necessarily having someone to go in and ask for it or follow up on it — I’d like to see just as a general policy that access is made available,” she added.

Mary Kay McCoy, chairperson at Voice for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children, said children across Ontario who have hearing loss are experiencing their own unique challenges this year, whether they learning in person or through virtual school.

At school, children with hearing loss are typically connected to an FM system through which their teacher is able to speak via microphone, directly into their hearing aids.

McCoy said typically, in non-COVID times, the microphone gets passed around the room so the student can also hear class discussions and comments or questions from their peers, but due to COVID-19, they are now missing out on that portion of their classroom experience.

“They’re losing out on the social interaction with the kids in the class because they can’t pass that mic around like they used to,” McCoy said. “That’s a struggle.”

marykaymccoyMary Kay McCoy is a chairperson with Voice for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children. – Voice photo

She added that for kids learning from home, the experience varies, depending on how the teacher is using Zoom technology and how many children are permitted to have their microphones on at one time — however, many of them are dealing with hearing fatigue.

“For deaf kids to sit there for two hours is the same as a child with no hearing loss sitting there for five or six hours,” she added.

Noxell cited similar issues for young adults in his age cohort who are seeking educational and employment opportunities and not only dealing with the stress caused by the full face mask, but the technology as well.

He said some of the video conferencing platforms that are being used have inadequate captioning options available, or require an additional cost to use the captioning.

“Without this, communication can be misinterpreted, and key information can go amiss,” he said.

“It is critical that solutions be developed to remove those barriers, as it not only puts our members’ employment at risk but can lead to higher stress (and) anxiety levels and listening fatigue, impacting mental health.”

‘Modest’ tax hike needed despite tough times: Severn mayor

Severn Township is raising taxes while also acknowledging the financial hardships some residents are facing during the coronavirus pandemic.

Mayor Mike Burkett said it would be irresponsible for the township to dip into its savings to shield residents from the impact of what he said was a relatively small increase to the tax levy.

“Council believes that drawing from capital reserves to avoid a tax increase is not a responsible way to protect municipal infrastructure, now and in the future, requiring us to make the difficult decision of imposing a modest tax increase,” Burkett said.

Township council, in approving its 2021 budget, has supported an estimated total tax rate increase of 2.45 per cent.

That amounts to an additional $69 in property taxes next year for the owner of an average single-family home.

Resident Bill Tasker isn’t opposed to paying the additional freight so long as it is reflected in improved services.

Policing in particular is one area in which Tasker supports investment.

“I think that is something that is really lacking in the area,” he told Simcoe.com.

Included in the budget are plans for significant reinvestment in core infrastructure, including more than $4 million for road upgrades.

While stressing the need to invest in infrastructure and maintain services, Burkett acknowledged the pandemic has impacted community members financially.

“We understand that our residents may be struggling through the financial impacts of COVID-19,” he added.

Other investments approved in the budget include more than $1.28 million for water and wastewater utilities — $800,000 of which is dedicated to the continued production of safe drinking water.

The municipality will also invest in outdoor recreation facilities with the support of federal and provincial grants.

Funds are earmarked for new universal washrooms in parks and an outdoor sports field.

The budget reflects the funding needed to maintain current service levels for the township and its shared service partners, including the township’s library, Orillia and Lake Country Tourism, Severn Sound Environmental Association, the OPP and the county.

In addition to infrastructure works, Severn’s budget includes funds to modernize the township’s financial systems and improve communication with residents.

Donald Trump lost, but Trumpism is still thriving. Could it take hold in Canada, too?

Canadians who were shocked by the election of Donald Trump in 2016 have been comforting themselves since then with two thoughts: it can’t happen again and it can’t happen here.

It didn’t happen again; not quite. But the fact that Trump gained more votes in 2020 than he did four years ago — roughly seven million more, so far — should serve as bracing evidence that Trumpism is more than a blip on the political landscape.

So by the same token, it’s probably unwise to continue assuming that Trump’s brand of politics can be somehow contained south of the Canada-U.S. border, any more than a virus can. While Canadians of a progressive bent may be still basking in relief over Joe Biden’s victory, complacency doesn’t seem like the best idea over the long haul.

The win, in short, was too close a call.

When you think about it, Canadian Liberals in particular have experienced two jolts to their comfortable assumptions in the past couple of weeks.

Two by-elections in Toronto, in some of the safest Liberal ridings in Canada, saw erosions in support for Justin Trudeau’s Liberals. These were the first electoral verdicts on the prime minister since the pandemic hit Canada, and the first chance for voters to weigh in on all of Trudeau’s very deliberate efforts to handle the crisis in a way opposite to Trump.

Trudeau won those by-elections, but not resoundingly. Nor was Trump resoundingly defeated last week, even if Canadians — like many pollsters north and south of the border — were expecting a slam dunk.

Frank Graves, the EKOS pollster who has been doing an intense study of populism and its potential to surface in Canada, was not feeling complacent at all as the results rolled in from the Nov. 3 vote. on the eve of the vote last week, and the conclusion of that article was a warning and a prediction wrapped up in four words: “Trump is still competitive.”

Quietly, methodically, Graves has been analyzing the component pieces of Trump’s appeal and what feeds the political culture of grievance that the president championed. Much of Graves’ in a paper for the University of Calgary’s public-policy school — a paper that should be required reading for any Canadians of the “it can’t happen here” way of thinking.

Graves has coined the phrase “ordered populism” to describe the Trump phenomenon and the paper’s summary describes it this way:

“Ordered populism rests on the belief in a corrupt elite, and the idea that power needs to be wrested from this elite and returned to the people. Oriented toward authoritarianism, ordered populism emphasizes obedience, hostility toward outgroups, a desire to turn back the clock to a time of greater order in society, and a search for a strongman type to lead the return to a better time.”

Does that type of politics exist in Canada? It sure does, Graves says, and it’s been on the rise for the past few years. His research says that view is shared by as much as a third of the population and its ascent is accompanied by increases in polarization, inequality and a decline in the middle class.

This is all a bucket of cold water on the wave of relief in Canada at Trump’s defeat, but Graves is blunt. “If you think anything has been solved in the United States with this election, it’s not,” he says. “Our response is typically in Canada to either sneer at this or deny that it’s happening, and that’s really not particularly helpful.”

Some of that denial is rooted in the fact that we really don’t have a northern version of Trump in Canada, though that label has been tried out on everyone from Ontario Premier Doug Ford to Alberta Premier Jason Kenney to Maxime Bernier, tleader of the new People’s Party — who hasn’t so far managed to win a seat for himself or his party. Nor has Canada polarized, at least not yet, around the pandemic, as the U.S. did.

Just because we don’t have a Trump here, though, doesn’t mean that we’re immune to the political forces he whipped up in the U.S.: whether that’s opposition to global trade and immigration, or grudge-fuelled resentment of institutions, big business, elites and experts. Any glance at the Canadian political conversation on Twitter demonstrates daily that this anger simmers on social media.

Allan Rock, former senior minister in Jean Chretien’s government who also served as Canada’s ambassador to the United Nations, has been urging that this country keep up its guard against the spread of Trumpism. He spoke about some of those concerns on CBC Radio’s The Current last week, and afterward obliged me with some further thoughts.

Rock says he’s been troubled for a while about what dark forces Trump seems to have unleashed, not just in the U.S., but in Canada too.

“I think the most damaging aspect of his awful tenure has been the voice he has given to white supremacy and racism generally,” Rock said.

He points to what , up 47 after Trump came to power. “Although the numbers went down in 2018, they remain higher than before Trump took office (they were on a downward trend 2014-16,)” Rock notes.

“Beyond those stats, one can cite the general coarsening of the language used in public debate, the frightening aggressiveness on social media, and the steep and activity of extreme right-wing groups in Canada — all evidence of lowered civility, more confrontational behaviour and the increasing boldness of the hatemongers.”

It’s not just words, though.

Rock didn’t mention it explicitly, but many Liberals are disturbed by how blithely people seem to have skipped right past a chilling incident last summer, when a Canadian Forces reserve member, Corey Hurren, crashed through the gates of Rideau Hall with a truck full of weapons, headed for Trudeau’s residence. As the Star has reported, Hurren has a well-documented connection to far-right conspiracy networks and the alternative-news universe. The “sausage-maker from Manitoba,” as Hurren has been described, was actually due in court last Friday, but the case was held over for another month, awaiting a possible plea.

The day before this incident, a “Freedom Rally” took place in Ottawa, complete with pandemic deniers, anti-mask and gun advocates, and yes, placards in support of Trump. It was by no means a large civil disturbance — the national capital kind of rolls with protests of all kinds — but it was enough of an event to show that Trump’s brand of grievance politics exists in Canada, too. Bernier made an appearance at the rally, but it would be a stretch to call him the leader of it.

Canada’s complacency about Trump-style politics is also fed by the absence here of two other major ingredients of its power in the U.S.: binary choices and Fox News (a mass-market media amplifier for Trump and his base).

In Canada, voters have more than two, either/or options at the ballot box and more citizens float between political parties, making it more difficult to cast the choice on election day as one between good and evil. There’s no equivalent of Fox News and viewership for it here is minuscule, say sources familiar with the Canadian ratings. An attempt at setting up a Fox News North, Sun TV, collapsed several years ago because it wasn’t profitable.

All Canadians who were riveted to the extra-long vote count in the U.S. — the ones who were hoping for Trump’s defeat — have no doubt floated between optimism and pessimism over the past week: hope for the way it turned out and despair that it was that close. It’s been said before; the hardest place to be in politics in these polarized times is right in the middle.

The centre is an even more uncomfortable place, too, after the past week in U.S. politics, which proved that it’s no longer possible — or wise — to see Trump as a passing or containable force.

Susan Delacourt is an Ottawa-based columnist covering national politics for the Star. Reach her via email: sdelacourt@thestar.ca or follow her on Twitter: @susandelacourt

Susan Delacourt is an Ottawa-based columnist covering national politics for the Star. Reach her via email: or follow her on Twitter: @susandelacourt

You can tell Barrie police what you think with online survey

Here’s your chance to tell Barrie police what you think.

The service has released its 2020 , which is completely confidential and available online.

The survey asks you a variety of questions to gauge how you feel about safety within your community.

You can share your feedback on the top issues facing your neighbourhood, how safe you feel in various locations during the day, and at night, as well as your level of satisfaction with the Barrie Police Service. 

The results are reported in the Barrie Police Service’s Annual Report and Strategic Plans next year.

The survey closes Dec. 11. Visit to get started.

‘We have a major problem’: Investigation finds ‘pervasive racism’ against Indigenous people in B.C. health care

VICTORIAThe Métis leader whose warning initiated what’s being touted as the first complete review of racism in a Canadian health-care system is now calling on the rest of the country to follow British Columbia’s lead.

Daniel Fontaine, chief executive officer of the Métis Nation British Columbia, says he’s not surprised that a report released Monday has found pervasive, systemic racism against Indigenous people in his province.

The groundbreaking report has the potential to initiate a Canada-wide reckoning on something Indigenous people have known their whole lives: that health-care racism and discrimination is hurting them and their health.

“It may be the first, but I daresay it won’t be the last of its kind in Canada,” Fontaine said of B.C.’s investigation. “It has national significance. Every province and territory in the country should be looking at it to ask them some tough questions.”

Racism is hurting the health of Indigenous people and leaving them more harshly affected by health crises, including the opioid crisis and the , the independent, groundbreaking probe released Monday in B.C. found.

The report details harrowing accounts shared with the investigative team from dozens of Indigenous people who describe forms of racism and discrimination that hindered their ability to access health care, and exposed them to damaging stereotypes and assumptions.

There was a case of an 11-year-old girl whose doctors did not seem to trust her word that she had not been drinking. A woman living on the Downtown Eastside was detained under the mental health act when she was mistakenly assessed as suicidal. One 57-year-old Indigenous man, later diagnosed to have two cracks in his pelvis after a fall, reported being ridiculed by two nurses and told he was fine.

When the man argued, security was called, and he spent the night in jail, instead of getting treatment.

What these examples illustrate, said Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, who led the investigation at the province’s request, is a health-care system that is unsafe for Indigenous people and that regularly paints them with a number of stereotypes instead of treating them with dignity and proper care.

“What it looks like are abusive interactions at the point of care; verbal and physical abuse; denial of service,” said Turpel-Lafond, a well-known Indigenous lawyer and former B.C. advocate for children and youth. “We have a major problem with Indigenous-specific racism and prejudice in B.C. health care.”

Turpel-Lafond said her team’s recommendations could provide a blueprint for the rest of the country for rooting out racism and discrimination.

The B.C. probe was initiated in June, after Fontaine alerted deputy health minister Stephen Brown about allegations that health-care workers in an emergency room had played a game they called “Price is Right.” That involved them guessing the blood-alcohol level of mainly Indigenous patients before they received treatment, and about a swath of complaints by health-care workers of alleged racist incidents against Indigenous people.

The meeting prompted B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix to call the investigation..

Turpel-Lafond said the investigation did not find evidence of an organized “Price is Right” game, but that it unearthed an even more insidious picture of a system rife with racism and prejudice that is making the B.C. health-care system an unsafe place for Indigenous people.

The report, called , is based on input from 9,000 people, including Indigenous people and health-care workers.

“It is shocking but not surprising to read those incidents throughout the … report and to ask: Why did it take Métis nation to trigger this report a number of months ago?” Fontaine said Monday.

He said clues to answer that question lie within a theme of Turpel-Lafond’s recommendations, which outline an urgent need to have Indigenous people at the table in health-care authorities and political bodies making decisions about health.

“Where we get vindication around bringing this up is in this report. It raises the spectre of systemic racism throughout the entire health-care system,” he said.

Now that the Turpel-Lafond report is out there, he said there’s no way people in positions of authority can deny how widespread and deep-rooted racism is in health care across Canada.

Turpel-Lafond said a second report, a data analysis of Indigenous-specific health outcomes, will be released in the next month.

The report’s 24 recommendations deal with implementing systems and cultural expectations to root out implicit and explicit racism in B.C.’s health-care system, including the creation of a B.C. Indigenous officer of health and an associate deputy minister of Indigenous health at the provincial government.

Dix on Monday offered an “unequivocal” apology for the findings of racism in the report, and vowed to implement recommendations immediately, including by introducing new Indigenous health liaisons in each of the province’s health authorities.

Indigenous leaders were quick to express their support for the recommendations, saying they were especially urgent in view of the pandemic.

“There is no time to wait; the current COVID-19 pandemic necessitates constant engagement by First Nations with the health-care system, and we categorically demand a safe health-care system for our people at this time and going forward,” reads a portion of a statement by the First Nations Leadership Council.

The in hospital earlier this year also served to highlight the barriers Indigenous people face to getting care.

Joyce Echaquan, an Atikamekw mother of seven, died soon after she filmed herself from her hospital bed in late September while she was in clear distress and pleading for help. Toward the end of the video, which was streamed live, two female hospital staff enter her room and are heard making degrading comments, including calling her stupid and saying she’d be better off dead.

The video has sparked widespread indignation, several inquiries and a lawsuit from Echaquan’s family against the hospital in Joliette where she died.

With files from Bayleigh Marelj and The Canadian Press

Alex McKeen is a Vancouver-based reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: